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 Revolutionary War tid bits? ...
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Author Previous Topic: Lewis Wetzel: frontier hero or rogue? Topic Next Topic: More Colonial Foods  

Monadnock Guide
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Posted - January 07 2009 :  12:14:35 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
http://www.state.de.us/facts/ushist/revfacts.htm

you can keep "The Change"
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Obediah
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Skull 5
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Posted - January 07 2009 :  5:13:40 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Copy this URL to Link to this Reply
Cool page...surprisingly (to me), I knew most of that stuff.

A few random thoughts...

Man, those RevWar armies sure were small!!

Good old Patrick Henry and his "Give me liberty or give me death!" Let's see, how many slaves did he own?

And let's not forget Sarah Henry, Patrick's "wife and the mother of his then 6 children had just recently died. She had suffered from a long and lingering disease* and before her death had been confined to a 18th century equivalent of a strait jacket. She was locked in two rooms in the cold basement, accessible only by a secret stair case." *Some sort of mental illness, possibly.

Nice guys, those aristocratic Virginia planters...
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Monadnock Guide
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Posted - January 07 2009 :  5:46:10 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Copy this URL to Link to this Reply
Yup, - the size of armies certainly has changed, unfortunately. Two things surprised me, - how well many colonists were doing financially - and the number of French v Americans were involved. That's the first time I have heard about Sarah being in a straight-jacket.

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Wilderness Woman
Watcher of the Wood


Young George Washington
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Posted - January 07 2009 :  6:08:41 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Copy this URL to Link to this Reply
It is definitely true that there were times when Washington's army was very small, due to desertions, terms of service expiring, etc. The numbers of men on active duty fluctuated a great deal as men left and went home and others joined up.

However, I am perplexed by the statement that Washington reported in 1779 that he had a field army of 3,468. Because during the summer of that year, he sent 2 armies with Generals Sullivan and Clinton into the Wilderness of New York, on what became known as the Sullivan-Clinton Expedition Against the Iroquois. Those armies totaled about 5,000 men. They were gone for months, beginning in the spring. I'm thinking that Washington must have been counting the number of men he kept with him. So, that would have been a total of over 8,000 men who were actively serving in 1779.

Also, I am quite surprised that Mr. Fleming did not mention the women who disguised themselves as men and literally fought as soldiers. Deborah Sampson. Also, there were women who served as spies and informers. This one was only 16! Sybil Ludington

"It is more deeply stirring to my blood than any imaginings could possibly have been."
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Fitzhugh Williams
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Posted - January 07 2009 :  6:38:39 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Copy this URL to Link to this Reply
And there was also an army in SC fighting the British who were in Savannah.


"Les deux pieds contre la muraille et la tete sous le robinet"
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Bookworm
Colonial Militia

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Posted - January 10 2009 :  4:10:37 PM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Copy this URL to Link to this Reply
My paternal great-grandmother's maiden name was Arnold. Never been sure how to feel about that.

Bookworm

"I've gotten so fascinated with the eighteenth century, I'm going to stay there." -- David McCullough

"Nothing to it, brother." -- Barack Obama
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Posted - January 16 2009 :  02:13:52 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Copy this URL to Link to this Reply
I can't speak to everything listed in the link, but I'll comment on a couple of things:

"Benedict Arnold was the best general in the Continental Army!"

I don't know about his ability as a strategist, but I'll go out on a limb and assert that Daniel Morgan was the best tactical leader of the American Revolution; similar to Robert Rogers in the French and Indian War. George Rogers Clark was no slouch as a tactical leader either.

"By 1779, there were more Americans fighting with the British than with Washington!"

Funny (odd, ironic) thing: at Kings Mountian the southern patriots were mostly of Scotch-Irish ("Scotch-Arsh") descent and the southern loyalists were mostly of Highland Scots descent.

The southern patriots were descendants of Lowland Scots who settled for about a century in Ulster, Ireland, and later came to the Appalachians (all the good lands along the coast and piedmont were already taken, so they moved inland). The southern loyalists were descendants of Highland Scots who settled in eastern North Carolina. So, in North Carolina descendants of the Lowlanders settled in the mountains and descendents of the Highlanders settled in the swamps. Go figure.

And, to the consternation of modern Scots/Scottish people, the descendants of the Ulster Plantation have long referred to themselves as "Scotch," not Scots or Scottish. Well, they started making "likker" out of corn almost as soon as they arrived so they didn't need to reserve the term "Scotch" for whiskey, now did they?

"I can't say I was ever lost, but I was bewildered once for three days." - Daniel Boone
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Fitzhugh Williams
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Posted - January 16 2009 :  11:45:57 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Copy this URL to Link to this Reply
The highland Scots rose up to support Cornwallis and Parker''s landing at Wilmington, NC. 1600 of them met the forces of Lillington and Caswell at Moore's Creek Bridge and were soundly defeated. After that they were deported.


"Les deux pieds contre la muraille et la tete sous le robinet"
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